My Best Friend´s Wedding

This title sounds like a cliché, but one of my best friends actually got married last summer. And despite being in London, I didn't want to miss this special event.

That is why I didn’t think twice about taking a plane to Madrid, then drive to Salamanca and finally come back to London in just four days.

I didn’t doubt either that I was going to take the pictures with my Diana Mini!

I think that almost from the very first moment I bought the camera, I had the idea in my mind of how the pictures were going to be: black and white, squared pictures.

The result? Retro pictures that look like an old wedding album!!! I love these pictures and my friend got very excited when I gave her the small, squared album with her own wedding immortalized in black and white.

By the way, I used a Kodak B&W 400 film, which gave me nice results both with the flash and without it.

More Interesting Articles

There is nothing better than a photo shot at the perfect moment. Henri Cartier-Bresson's principle on "The Decisive Moment" is a principle that we should still follow to this day. A perfectly-timed photo creates impact, whether it's one of a friend jumping into the pool or a couple emerging from the ceremony on their wedding day. For this rumble, we want to see that breathtaking moment, shot at the perfect time. And you showed us what it's like to be on time.

In celebration of the mindblowing solar eclipse we had the other day, we ran a competition and asked you to tag your analogue photos centered around our great big yellow friend! Check out the winners now!

In December last year James Wright, editor and creative director of So It Goes Magazine, went on a two-week trip to Sri Lanka, "a place so long on our bucket list, but up until then, as yet unvisited," he writes on the first of his three-part photo diary. Herein is the first of his series that chronicles his adventures, highlighted by a selection of breathtaking images of the Sri Lankan countryside and the locals, among many other images, captured with his trusty photographic companions: the Leica MP, Lomo LC-A+, and an assortment of films including the LomoChrome Purple.

Simeon Smith is a musician who recorded the sounds of our film cameras in action and made these samples available as a free download. We couldn't resist interviewing him about this project and taking a look at some of his photos. Meet the man behind the cams here.

Stephen Shore introduced to the 70s art world an unadorned image of American life. He captured littered restaurant tables as other photographers would immaculate vistas. For the opening of “American Surfaces”, he even taped unframed snapshots on gallery walls. In these videos, Shore talks about objects that have “no pretention to art” and the things he learned from Andy Warhol.